MrBeast and Amazon named in lawsuit over Beast Games
YouTuber MrBeast has been named in court documents which allege contestants were âshamelessly exploitedâ in his upcoming series Beast Games.
People who took part have sued the production companies involved in the show, which include MrB2024 and Amazon.
The series, first announced in March, offered 1,000 participants the chance to win a cash prize of $5m (ÂŁ3.5m) and promised to be the biggest live game show in the world.
But in a case filed at a Los Angeles court on Monday, participants allege they werenât paid, were subjected to unsafe conditions and experienced sexual harassment.
Documents say MrB2024 is âbelieved to be owned in whole or part, directly or indirectlyâ, by MrBeast â real name Jimmy Donaldson â who is the biggest YouTuber in the world with more than 300m subscribers.
BBC Newsbeat has contacted MrBeast and Amazon for comment.
In the legal papers, parts of which have been redacted, five anonymous contestants have brought claims on behalf of everyone who took part.
They claim the production team kept them under surveillance, controlled when they slept, what they wore and denied them privacy and access to the outside world.
They were âunderfed and overtiredâ, it claims, with meals provided âsporadically and sparselyâ which âendangered the health and welfareâ of the contestants.
The 54-page document also details allegations of an unsafe environment with contestants being penned into small areas, dangerous sets and insufficient background checks allowing convicted criminals to participate.
Some, it claims, were physically injured and were not given adequate access to medical care.
âCulture of misogynyâ
The set was also said to have âfostered a culture of misogyny and sexismâ, creating a âhostile environmentâ for women which included sexual harassment.
âThis was not only noticed but allowed,â the document says. âAnd apparently this was allowed because of marching orders from the top.â
The contestantsâ lawyers say they should be compensated for their time which they say was âessential labourâ for the production, arguing they were ânot working for freeâ and should have been classed as employees.
All the claimants are seeking thousands of dollars for everyone who took part to cover âunpaid wagesâ.
Two of the listed claimants who are women are also seeking further compensation for the allegations of a hostile workplace.
Earlier this year, MrBeast announced he had hired private investigators to look into allegations that a co-host on his channel had groomed a minor.
Ava Kris Tyson was accused by other YouTubers of sending inappropriate messages to the minor when she was 20. She denied accusations of grooming.
MrBeast removed her from the channel and said he did âcondone or support any of the inappropriate actionsâ.
Representatives for MrBeast and Amazon have not responded to Newsbeatâs request for comment. Also named in the papers is a production company, Off Oneâs Base LLP, which BBC Newsbeat has been unable to contact.